Clinical reappraisal of the composite international diagnostic interview version 3.3 in Qatar's National Mental Health Study

Author:

Khaled Salma M.1ORCID,Amro Iman2ORCID,Abdelkader Menatalla3,Al Bahari Dalia3,Al Shawwaf Mahmoud3,Alabdulla Majid34,Alhassan Ahmed3,Ali Amal2,Aly Sheeren3,Amin Asmaa2,Chiu Wai Tat5ORCID,Currie James3,El Fakki Hana3,First Michael B.6,Hassan Mohammed H. O.3ORCID,Hijawi Zainab3,Mohammed Rumaisa2,Nofal Marwa2,Salman Salma3,Sampson Nancy A.5,Woodruff Peter W.7ORCID,Kessler Ronald C.5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Population Medicine College of Medicine Qatar University Doha Qatar

2. The Social & Economic Survey Research Institute Qatar University Doha Qatar

3. Qatar Hamad Medical Corporation Doha Qatar

4. College of Medicine, Qatar University Doha Qatar

5. Department of Health Care Policy Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

6. Columbia University Department of Psychiatry New York New York USA

7. School of Medicine and Population Health University of Sheffield Sheffield UK

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesLifetime DSM‐5 diagnoses generated by the lay‐administered Composite International Diagnostic Interview for DSM‐5 (CIDI) in the World Mental Health Qatar (WMHQ) study were compared to diagnoses based on blinded clinician‐administered reappraisal interviews.MethodsTelephone follow‐up interviews used the non‐patient edition of the Structured Clinician Interview for DSM‐5 (SCID) oversampling respondents who screened positive for five diagnoses in the CIDI: major depressive episode, mania/hypomania, panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, and obsessive‐compulsive disorder. Concordance was also examined for a diagnoses of post‐traumatic stress disorder based on a short‐form versus full version of the PTSD Checklist for DSM‐5 (PCL‐5).ResultsInitial CIDI prevalence estimates differed significantly from the SCID for most diagnoses ( = 6.6–31.4, p = 0.010 < 0.001), but recalibration reduced most of these differences and led to consistent increases in individual‐level concordance (AU‐ROC) from 0.53–0.76 to 0.67–0.81. Recalibration of the short‐form PCL‐5 removed an initially significant difference in PTSD prevalence with the full PCL‐5 (from  = 610.5, p < 0.001 to  = 2.5, p = 0.110) while also increasing AU‐ROC from 0.76 to 0.81.ConclusionsRecalibration resulted in valid diagnoses of common mental disorders in the Qatar National Mental Health Survey, but with inflated prevalence estimates for some disorders that need to be considered when interpreting results.

Funder

Qatar National Library

Publisher

Wiley

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Closing the gaps in mental health epidemiology—New survey data from Qatar;International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research;2024-05

2. Lifetime prevalence, risk, and treatment of mood and anxiety disorders in Qatar's national mental health study;International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research;2024-05

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